Obama defends historic trip to Burma

United States President
Barack Obama
on Sunday defended his trip to Myanmar, also known as Burma, insisting the visit Monday is “not an endorsement" of the long-repressive nation’s leadership but rather an acknowledgment of its progress toward reform.

"I don’t think anybody is under any illusion that Burma has arrived; that they’re where they need to be," Obama said during a joint news conference with Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra to kick off his three-country Asia trip.

“I’m not somebody who thinks the United States should stand on the sidelines and not get its hands dirty when there’s an opportunity for us to encourage the better impulses inside a country," Mr Obama said.

Human rights activists have denounced Mr Obama’s decision to become the first US president to visit the South-East Asian nation, which is attempting to emerge from decades of authoritarian military rule. Critics of the trip said the White House should not reward Myanmar prematurely, citing escalating ethnic violence against the nation’s Muslim minority that has killed hundreds and displaced as many as 100,000.

The Obama administration has bet heavily on Myanmar’s continued commitment to reform, appointing ambassador Derek Mitchell to the country in June and sending Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for a visit there last December.

Mrs Clinton, who was in Bangkok with Mr Obama, will fly with him aboard Air Force One into the historic capital of Rangoon on Monday. Mrs Clinton has said she will leave her post as soon as a successor is found, and this is their final foreign trip together, White House officials said.

“If we waited to engage until they had achieved a perfect democracy, my suspicion is that we’d be waiting an awful long time," Mr Obama said of Myanmar. “One of the goals of this trip is to highlight progress that has been made, but also voice that much greater progress needs to be made in the future."

Mr Obama opened his first post-election foreign trip by paying a visit to Thailand’s King Bhumibol Adulyedaj, 84, a revered figure who is severely ill and hospitalised, and touring the Wat Pho Royal Monastery before joining Ms Yingluck in a formal welcome dinner at the Government House. The president lavished praise on his host country, saying Thailand’s 180-year relationship with the United States makes it “our oldest ally" in Asia.

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The Obama administration is using the Asia trip, which includes a final stop in Cambodia for the East Asia Summit, as another step in its “pivot to Asia" aimed at counterbalancing China’s growing influence in the region.

During the news conference, Mr Obama responded to a question about whether Beijing offered Thailand a less messy path toward prosperity than politically gridlocked Washington, by saying that “democracy is a little messier than alternative systems of government, but that’s because democracy allows everybody to have a voice".

He added that “the notion somehow that you can take shortcuts and avoid democracy, and that that somehow is going to be the mechanism whereby you deliver economic growth, I think is absolutely false".

Though the trip takes Mr Obama out of Washington just as negotiations over the looming “fiscal cliff" heat up, he hoped some good fortune in Thailand would rub off on his domestic prospects.

“We're working on this budget, we’re going to need a lot of prayer for that," Obama joked to the head Buddhist monk who was guiding him and Mrs Clinton on a private tour of the Royal Monastery.

“I always believe in prayer," Mr Obama said during his news conference, after a reporter mentioned the joke during a question. “If a Buddhist monk is wishing me well, I’m going to take whatever good vibes he can give me to try to deal with some challenges back home. I’m confident that we can get our fiscal situation dealt with."